AP CSP Unit 3 Vocabulary

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34 Terms

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procedure

a named collection of steps in an algorithm that can be reused anytime it is needed without restating the detailed procedures (abstraction)

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concatenation

chaining together or placing two or more separate things side by side so that they are treated as one.

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string

a linear sequence of characters, words, or other data

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dichotomous

in which something can only be one thing or another (yes or no)

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binary code

code represented with the two symbols of 1 and 0

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bits

the foundation for digital computing (1s and 0s) - short for binary digits

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digital

how information is stored, accessed, transformed and used by computers

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state space

the space of potential possibilities

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exponential growth

the rate of growth that rapidly increases in proportion to the growing total number or size.

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decimal

describes the base-10 number system. The most commonly used number system.

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ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange)

a table that outlines a common set of conventions established for converting between binary values and alphanumeric (represents 128 different characters)

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alphanumeric

the characters that consists of uppercase and lowercase letters in addition to numerals 0-9.

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digital noise

irrelevant or meaningless data that has found its way into otherwise meaningful code.

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abstraction

the process of removing or suppressing details to create a manageable level of complexity.

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bit string

a sequence of bits that can be used to represent sets or to manipulate binary data.

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mapping

associating each element of a given set with one or more elements of a second set.

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data

characters, symbols or quantities on which operations are performed, stored and/or transmitted by a computer.

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unicode

a binary encoding system that can represent much more of the world's text than ASCII can (represents 65,536 different characters)

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hexadecimal

a base-16 number system utilizing numbers 0-9 and letters A-F used to represent eight binary digits or one byte.

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Morse Code

a code where letters are represented by combinations of long and short signals of light or sound.

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Baudot Code

a binary code invented by Emile Baudot in 1870 that uses crosses and dots in order to encode 2^5 or 32 characters.

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variable-width encoding

using codes of different lengths to encode a character set for representation (example: Morse Code)

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fixed-width encoding

using codes with a fixed width to encode a character set for representation (example: Baudot Code)

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discrete

separate or divided (digital)

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continuous

unbroken, without interruption (analog)

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approximation

digital copies are only approximations of the natural object.

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analog

non-digital signals or information represented by a continuously variable physical quantity such as spatial position or voltage.

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list

a data structure (also called an array) that stores multiple pieces of information at once.

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data structure

a particular way of organizing and storing data such as an array, table, etc.

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index value

the representation of the location of each item in a list.

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output

observable behaviors generated by the computer such as animation, sound, and text.

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join

block in Scratch that concatenates, or links two values together. Example: "hello" and "there" would result in "hellothere".

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linear search

a method for finding a target value within a list (whether presorted or not) by checking each value until a match is found or until all the elements have been searched.

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substring

a subset of a string of alphanumeric fields or variables.